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Träfflista för sökning "WFRF:(Lankheet Imke) "

Search: WFRF:(Lankheet Imke)

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1.
  • Hammarén, Rickard, et al. (author)
  • Ancestry contributions within geographically dispersed South African Coloured groups
  • Other publication (other academic/artistic)abstract
    • The South African Coloured people (SAC) are the most prominent admixed population in the country. They are descendants of local Khoe-San, and Bantu-speaking populations, European settlers, and enslaved people from the East and West Coast of Africa, South and East Asia, brought during the slave trade period. The term "Coloured" was an artificial category used by the South African apartheid government to group various groups with mixed ancestry. The term is still widely used today and is one of the ethnic categories in the South African government census. While the term is embraced by some people categorised as Coloured, it is rejected by others. This study aimed to investigate the remnant Khoekhoe and San genetic ancestry within various Coloured groups together with other ancestries introduced during colonial times. We generated novel genotyping, mtDNA, and Y-chromosome data for 65 individuals at two locations and, together with data from previously published studies, we assembled a dataset of 222 SAC individuals from 17 different geographic locations. This study has gathered the most extensive dataset of SAC individuals sampled from the largest number of sites to date. At 14 out of the 17 locations, Khoe-San was the majority ancestry. The Coloured populations display genetic ancestry from Khoe-San, West African, East African, East Asian, South Asian, and European groups at vastly varying amounts across the sampled locations, reflecting the history of South Africa, apartheid laws, and socio-cultural groupings. The ancestry proportions from different source populations differ by large fractions between the autosomes and uni-parental markers, which points to sex-biased admixture in the Coloured.This research highlights the importance of studying the South African Coloured population to comprehend the impact of complex migration patterns and historical systems of segregation in South Africa. 
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2.
  • Lankheet, Imke, et al. (author)
  • The performance of common SNP arrays in assigning African mitochondrial haplogroups
  • 2021
  • In: BMC GENOMIC DATA. - : BioMed Central (BMC). - 2730-6844. ; 22:1
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • Background Mitochondrial haplogroup assignment is an important tool for forensics and evolutionary genetics. African populations are known to display a high diversity of mitochondrial haplogroups. In this research we explored mitochondrial haplogroup assignment in African populations using commonly used genome-wide SNP arrays. Results We show that, from eight commonly used SNP arrays, two SNP arrays outperform the other arrays when it comes to the correct assignment of African mitochondrial haplogroups. One array enables the recognition of 81% of the African mitochondrial haplogroups from our compiled dataset of full mitochondrial sequences. Other SNP arrays were able to assign 4-62% of the African mitochondrial haplogroups present in our dataset. We also assessed the performance of available software for assigning mitochondrial haplogroups from SNP array data. Conclusions These results provide the first cross-checked quantification of mitochondrial haplogroup assignment performance from SNP array data. Mitochondrial haplogroup frequencies inferred from most common SNP arrays used for human population analysis should be considered with caution.
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4.
  • Peyroteo Stjerna, Rita, 1977-, et al. (author)
  • Working in an Ancient DNA Lab - short video (Swedish)
  • 2021
  • Other publication (film/video) (pop. science, debate, etc.)abstract
    • Antikt DNA är en ny forskningsdisciplin som kan lära oss mer om människans historia, evolution och populationsgenetik. Genom forskning på DNA som finns i förhistoriska ben från arkeologiska utgrävningar kan man berätta om människans utveckling och historia. I den här videon kommer vi att visa er hur det är att jobba med förhistoriskt DNA i ett laboratorium.
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5.
  • Vicente, Mário, et al. (author)
  • Male-biased migration from East Africa introduced pastoralism into southern Africa
  • 2021
  • In: BMC Biology. - : Springer Science and Business Media LLC. - 1741-7007. ; 19:1
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • Background: Hunter-gatherer lifestyles dominated the southern African landscape up to ~ 2000 years ago, when herding and farming groups started to arrive in the area. First, herding and livestock, likely of East African origin, appeared in southern Africa, preceding the arrival of the large-scale Bantu-speaking agro-pastoralist expansion that introduced West African-related genetic ancestry into the area. Present-day Khoekhoe-speaking Namaqua (or Nama in short) pastoralists show high proportions of East African admixture, linking the East African ancestry with Khoekhoe herders. Most other historical Khoekhoe populations have, however, disappeared over the last few centuries and their contribution to the genetic structure of present-day populations is not well understood. In our study, we analyzed genome-wide autosomal and full mitochondrial data from a population who trace their ancestry to the Khoekhoe-speaking Hessequa herders from the southern Cape region of what is now South Africa.Results: We generated genome-wide data from 162 individuals and mitochondrial DNA data of a subset of 87 individuals, sampled in the Western Cape Province, South Africa, where the Hessequa population once lived. Using available comparative data from Khoe-speaking and related groups, we aligned genetic date estimates and admixture proportions to the archaeological proposed dates and routes for the arrival of the East African pastoralists in southern Africa. We identified several Afro-Asiatic-speaking pastoralist groups from Ethiopia and Tanzania who share high affinities with the East African ancestry present in southern Africa. We also found that the East African pastoralist expansion was heavily male-biased, akin to a pastoralist migration previously observed on the genetic level in ancient Europe, by which Pontic-Caspian Steppe pastoralist groups represented by the Yamnaya culture spread across the Eurasian continent during the late Neolithic/Bronze Age.Conclusion: We propose that pastoralism in southern Africa arrived through male-biased migration of an East African Afro-Asiatic-related group(s) who introduced new subsistence and livestock practices to local southern African hunter-gatherers. Our results add to the understanding of historical human migration and mobility in Africa, connected to the spread of food-producing and livestock practices.
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